From the Libertarian Party of California: www.ca.lp.org
Tax-Paid Campaigns? Sewage Is Cleaner! No on 89!
Fred E. Foldvary
In the November 2006 election, Californians
will vote on Proposition 89, which would increase
taxes on corporations to finance political
campaigns. Forcing taxpayers to pay for political
propaganda is as clean as untreated
sewage. Inflicting the tax on corporate earnings
(including incorporated small business) does not
make it clean. Corporate taxes are passed on to
consumers and create disincentives to locate
business in California, reducing employment.
The corrupting influence of special-interest
campaign funds is a symptom of a bad political
structure. "Public funding" forces
taxpayers to patch up a badly constructed system,
as the moneyed interests find other ways to
influence legislation.
The reason special interests get privileges is
that they exploit an inherently corrupting voting
system, mass democracy. When thousands of voters
elect a representative, politicians must use mass
media to exclaim that they are the true champions
of the people. The need to use expensive media
creates a huge demand for campaign funds. The
moneyed interests, such as big corporations,
supply these funds in exchange for political
favors.
Tax-paid campaign financing also strengthens
the domination of the establishment parties, the
Democrats and Republicans, stifling competition
from the smaller challenger parties. This
strengthens the status quo at the expense of new
ideas that could better solve our social
problems.
Moreover, tax-paid financing will not stop the
privilege seeking of the special interests. It is
like standing on your toes to see a parade
better. If everybody does it, then you are no
better off. Tax-paid campaigns put politicians who
receive them on their toes, so to get an
advantage, a politician needs stilts, and the
special interests once again are happy to provide
them.
Attempts to severely limit private financing of
political campaigns inevitably fail. The moneyed
interests find ways to get around the
restrictions, such as financing
"nonprofit" organizations to place the
ads. Small business have more difficulty doing
this, so Proposition 89 will hurt small business
much more than the big political players. The
demand for extra campaign money is inherent in
mass democracy, and where there is demand, supply
will inevitably follow. Also, free speech is
stifled when speakers are unable to finance the
transmission of speech. Extreme restrictions on
political financing will be challenged in the
courts.
Advocates of Proposition 89 claim it creates a
level playing field for elections, but this claim
is false for two reasons. First, the proposition
favors the major parties and candidates who can
collect more signatures. Second, it does not
really stop the special-interest money. In fact,
it creates a vicious upward spiral of increasing
funding by matching the funds from other
sources. Moreover, when we force taxpayers,
including consumers to whom the tax has been
transferred, to pay for accusatory negative ads,
how can that be anything but disgustingly filthy?
It's bad enough we have to watch these
mean-spirited ads—it adds injury to insult
to force us to pay for them.
The supporters of Proposition 89 either
represent special interests, or they just don't
understand the inherent problem of mass
democracy. The only effective way to remove the
unclean influence of special interests is to
eliminate the cause, by radically decentralizing
the structure of government and voting.
We could replace mass democracy by voting only
for neighborhood representatives whom we can
know. Candidates would not need big campaign
funding. Local councils would then send
representatives to city councils, who would send
representatives to county boards. The boards would
then elect the state legislature. With all voting
in small groups, special interests could be
rebuffed in local meetings and personal
conversations. The power of the individual voter
would be leveraged up by being able to recall any
official who fails to truly represent the
people.
The corruption in politics is so deep and
ingrained that only such a fundamental
decentralization can clean it out. The most
important reason to vote against Proposition 89 is
that when tax-paid political financing is in
place, it will be extremely difficult to remove,
no matter how much it fails, because it cements
the status quo into power. The public will be
helpless to get rid of corrupt politicians,
because status quo politicians will get most of
the government funding and yet still benefit from
the special-interest campaigning that will sneak
through loopholes that cannot be closed without
totally stifling political speech.
© Copyright 2008 by Libertarian Party of California
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